Khaldoun al-Hussain concentrates as he stitches a piece of gray rubber, leaning over his sewing machine in the workshop of the small Berlin-based registered non-profit association called Mimycri. A border of yellow thread takes shape on the material that he works with an expert hand.
The material from rubber dinghies, abandoned by migrants on the beaches of Greek islands, is finding a second life in Berlin.
It is transformed by refugees into bags then sold online.
Photo: AFP
Al-Hussain, a 34-year-old Syrian, is familiar with the robust and weather-resistant rubber that he now works with after being recovered in Greece.
Four years ago, he climbed into a makeshift boat made of the same material to reach the Aegean island of Chios from the Turkish coast.
“There were many of us and the crossing was very, very dangerous,” said the tailor, who learned his trade in garment factories in Damascus before he left to seek asylum in Germany.
Photo: AFP
Mimycri recovers inflatable rafts, abandoned on the shores of Chios and the nearby island of Lesbos, which both bore witness to the 2015 migration crisis when hundreds of thousands of refugees landed on Europe’s beaches.
At the peak of the crisis, Greece recorded up to 7,000 arrivals a day.
While the number of crossings has slowed considerably since an agreement between the EU and Turkey in 2016, it still averages about 100 people per day.
On the spot, non-profit organizations recover the boats that litter the coast, along with discarded life jackets and clothing.
“We recover 90 percent of the boats stranded on the coast,” said Toula Kitromilidi, Greek coordinator of the non-governmental organization Chios Eastern Shore Response Team.
“The rest are used by the locals,” Kitromilidi said, indicating how for example farmers convert the boats’ rubber panels into tarpaulin covers.
Cut into large strips, the panels are sent to Berlin, cleaned and transformed into bags.
Customers “buy these bags because they tell a story, because they are more than just something you own,” said Vera Guenther, one of Mimycri’s founders, in her bright workshop.
Heavy sewing machines hum in the background under shelves filled with rolls of rubber.
Each segment is unique, sometimes with stripes or marks that often tell their own tragic stories.
Mimycri’s customers, who snapped up about 120,000 euros (US$132,578) worth of its wares last year, can indirectly learn “what is happening in Syria ... and how many people have died or are still dying there,” al-Hussain said.
His goal is to bring his mother to Berlin from Syria, where she is sick and alone.
As for the inhabitants of the Greek islands: “They are very happy [with our work] because they do not want their beaches to be covered with plastic waste,” Guenther said.
She gave up her job in the environmental sector to run Mimycri, which sells 11 products, with 3 percent of sales donated to NGOs in Greece.
Its latest creation is a toiletry bag, which, like all the products it sells on the Internet, is also sold in some shops in Berlin and Munich.
Guenther, 32, was among the Germans who came to offer their help to refugees as they arrived in droves at the country’s train stations in the summer of 2015.
“I wanted to be part of this new Germany that welcomes people who have lost their belongings, their homes and sometimes also their families,” she said.
During winter of 2015-2016, she left for Chios to help frightened migrants landing on the beaches after often harrowing journeys.
With a German passport, she could make the crossing from the Turkish coastal city Izmir to the Greek island in 30 minutes for 14 euros “while drinking a beer and taking a little nap.”
She was profoundly aware that Syrians, Iraqis and Afghans were risking their lives on makeshift rafts by paying at least US$1,000 to human traffickers.
She spent several months on the island and returned to Berlin with a section of rubber in her luggage.
It was transformed into a bag and the idea to make the practical fashionable items was born.
The organization raised 43,000 euros in a crowdfunding scheme to bring the dream to life.
Now, Mimycri employs five people, including a Syrian and a Pakistani.
“We want to change the way we look at refugees,” Guenther said. “These are people ... who want to have a job, a house, just like all of us.”
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